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Milo Murphy's Law Trope Examples
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    # 
  • 2D Visuals, 3D Effects: The CG meat dinosaur in "Family Vacation" stands out. Though in general, most cars in the show look a little out of place too.

    A 
  • Absurdly Spacious Sewer: The town's sewers are a frequent setting, with Milo regularly using them to navigate the city and Scott the Undergrounder more or less living there.
  • Acquainted with Emergency Services:
    • Because Milo is Born Unlucky and a Walking Disaster Area, the firefighters and police know him to the point that he keeps a framed photograph of them in his room.
    • In "Rooting for the Enemy", it's revealed that his family, mainly Milo and his father, Martin, have their own hospital suite called the "Murphy Suite".
    • In "The Note", the government is fully aware of the Murphys' luck and have dubbed their neighborhood as "The Murphy Sector".
    • In "Worked Day", when Milo's class is having a career day, they meet Melissa's father, who's a firefighter, whose squad just put out a fire at a fish hatchery:
      Mr. Chase: Milo, you weren't here at the fish hatchery this morning, were you?
      Melissa: Dad!
      Mr. Chase: Ha! I kid! ... But seriously, you weren't here, right?
      Milo: (cheerfully) Why Mr. Chase, I'm flattered! (suddenly deadpan, visibly irritated) But no.
  • Acronyms Are Easy as Aybeecee: Invoked with the name of Milo Murphy's dog Diogee, which is pronounced like "D-O-G."
  • Action Survivor: Milo has to be to survive life. Melissa and Zack to a lesser degree, merely by being in proximity to Milo.
  • Actually Pretty Funny: Mr. Drako asks Milo to list five historic disasters. Milo includes Drako's haircut on the list, and after remarking on the cattiness of the remark, Drako accepts it as an answer.
  • Advertising by Association: The show was initially advertised as "from the team that brought you Phineas and Ferb". Somewhat justified since it's not only made by the same team but takes place in the same universe.
  • Adults Are Useless: When the class field trip is shipwrecked on an island in "Some Like It Yacht," the faculty immediately go feral and run off, leaving the middle-schoolers to strategize. It's probably worth noting that this field trip is happening in the first place because the school board, after blowing the year's budget on a yacht, have decided they might as well get some practical use out of a vessel that crippled their finances so badly that the students have been forced to bring their own toilet paper to school.
  • Affably Evil: King Pistachion is surprisingly family loving and polite for a sentient pistachio plant out to take over the world.
  • All Girls Want Bad Boys: Zigzagged. The Brulee twins gush about how "dangerous" Milo is, but he remains the polite, optimistic young man we know and love. And they do make enthusiastic note of his sweater vest.
  • Alliterative Name: Tobias Trollhammer.
  • Alternate Species Counterpart: The episode "The Note" has a moment where the main characters encounter a Similar Squad, which includes a pet pig who strongly resembles Diogee.
  • Amusement Park: Lard World is Milo's favorite and shows up sometimes, especially as the setting of "Murphy's Lard". The end of the first season has it turned into an Amusement Park of Doom.
  • Animal Gender-Bender: Averted in "We're Going to the Zoo" where the female ostrich has brown feathers.
  • Animal Motif
    • Primates seem to have a place in the show:
      • An orangutan once tried to steal Milo's pistachios.
      • Melissa recalls a time when an orangutan takes her away during a card game with Milo.
      • A poster in Melissa's room has a primate-like creature (most likely Bigfoot).
      • Of course, the presence of Time Ape, Dr. Zone's sidekick.
      • There's a gorilla in a miniature golf course where Sara and Milo played in.
      • Monkeys are featured in one of the zoetropes.
      • Brigette's vintage t-shirts were stolen by monkeys for Milo, Zack, and Sara to chase.
    • And so do llamas:
      • There's the whole Llama Incident that had been building up in the first half of Season 1.
      • The promotional poster (the current Page Image) features a llama emerging from a manhole getting stepped on by Zack, and a whole bunch of llamas stuck in a tree in the distance.
      • Llamas are seen watching Milo, Melissa and Zack in "Perchance to Sleepwalk".
      • The goal for the charity race in "Pace Makes Waste" is to raise enough money to take care of homeless llamas. Martin and Brigette even made plush llama merchandise for it.
      • The benefit concert Amanda got for Milo, Melissa and Zack in "Managing Murphy's Law" is called "Forget the Llamas, Save the Alpacas". Ironically, Amanda misnames the alpacas "llamas".
  • Arc Symbol: Pistachios in Season 1, as well as the pistachio stand with "Pistachios" written on it. It's the kind of nuts the two time traveling agents Dakota and Cavendish are tasked to protect. Pistachios are also Dr. Zone and Mr. Block's favorite kind of nut. As it turns out, mutated pistachio trees happen to be the Arc Villain for Season 1.
  • Art Evolution: The show's animation tends to be much more dynamic and fairly smooth, compared to its parent series.
    • The character designs tend to be much more detailed and realistically-proportioned than in Phineas and Ferb. This is pretty noticeable in the 2018 crossover episode when the casts of both shows are shown side by side.
  • Artificial Intelligence: "A Clockwork Origin" has the robot C.I.D.D..
  • Artistic License – Biology:
    • "Going the Extra Milo" makes the common mistake of portraying wild beehives as resembling a hornet's nest.
    • Pileated woodpeckers are drawn with only three toes, lacking the second backwards-pointing toe in the zygodactyl foot. Also, macaws are drawn with generic anisodactyl feet.
    • Ostriches are shown with three toes rather than two (a mistake also made in Phineas and Ferb).
    • Pelicans are drawn with oversized bill pouches, and their feet are shown as generic bird feet with only three toes and no webbing (another mistake also made in Phineas and Ferb).
    • The female gazelle in "We're Going to the Zoo" is drawn without horns. Plus there's the fact that she's pink.
    • In "The Llama Incident", Milo claims that woodpeckers eat branches. Most woodpeckers feed primarily on insects; they peck at trees to find and uncover them.
    • Spiders are drawn with six legs instead of eight.
    • Hilariously lampshaded in "We're Going to the Zoo" when Sara wonders why Milo's platypus pajamas are teal when platypuses are supposed to be brown.
  • Artistic License – Paleontology:
    • The T. rex model in "The Little Engine That Couldn't" has three fingers on each hand instead of two (again, a mistake also made in Phineas and Ferb).
    • The Velociraptor in "Christmas Peril" is, as usual, oversized and featherless.
  • Awesome Backpack: Due to having to prepare for unfortunate circumstances, Milo has to keep a backpack that contains many things to protect him and his friends.
    • Milo actually was gifted his backpack by his former babysitter, Veronica, who was so awesome, Milo says she was stronger than Murphy's Law.
  • Awesome, but Impractical: The Murphy's Law Curse itself is ultimatly seen as this if you can get past constantly being in danger. Zack lampshades this in episode 1. Sure it puts your life at risk every day, but every day is an adventure and you get to be around some of the best people in the world.

    B 
  • Baby Morph Episode: "Backwards to School Night."
  • Bag of Holding: Milo's bag holds a carburetor, a bicycle tire, an accordion, a generator, a monkey wrench and even an anchor. It does not, however, have a clock in it.
  • The Band Minus the Face: The Lumberzacks minus Zack, now known as "Lumbermax."
    Melissa: Well, now all the good band names are taken.
  • Battle Couple: Averted. Brick and Savanna have all the makings of spy lovers, buy they just don't feel anything romantic or sexual for each other.
  • Beauty Is Never Tarnished: Averted. At the end of "Murphy's Lard", Melissa looks like a Shell-Shocked Veteran with wild hair and a Thousand-Yard Stare.
  • Been There, Shaped History: It's indicated that past ancestors of the Murphy family were involved in historical disasters such as the San Francisco Earthquake, the Hindenberg crashing, the sinking of the Titanic, etc.
    • The reason we know the 1803 land deal as "The Louisiana Purchase" as opposed to "The Mississippi Purchase" is because of something Dakota traveled back in time and did. Both him and Cavendish are also the reason the Leap Year exists... Dakota's idiotic misplacement of a time grenade (which can literally erase time) being the reason Halloween wasn't a holiday in the future until he successfully managed to undo his mistake... but not before he accidentally time-shifted himself and Cavendish to Ancient Rome where a run-in with Julius Caesar caused the time grenade to go off and erase February 29th, but not completely since Dakota had the time grenade one-quarter disarmed, so we'll still get one every four years, hence Leap Year.
  • Belligerent Sexual Tension: Parodied and subverted with time agents Brick and Savannah, who try their best to evoke this as part of their Tuxedo and Martini aesthetic but find that they have no chemistry.
  • Big Damn Heroes:
    • Diogee regularly goes out of his way to help Milo in any situation, from crossing the country on foot to skydiving out of an airplane to a deserted island.
    • In the crossover episode Phineas and Ferb show up in the nick of time to save their friends and Milo's from Nut-Jobbers. And at the end, right when Milo, Phineas Ferb, Doofenshmirtz, Cavendish, Dakota and Orton are about to get captured by their mulched friends, Doof's future self, Professor Time, shows up just in time to pick up Orton and defeat Derek in 1955.
  • Birthday Episode: "Party of Peril" is about everyone planning Milo's 13th birthday.
  • Black Comedy Burst:
    • In the closing moments of "The Llama Incident," we see what appears to be our three plucky young protagonists plummeting from a cliff and spattering the rocks below with their blood. The camera lingers lovingly over the shot before pulling away to reveal the kids, who have safely escaped their doom offscreen, approaching Mort to ask him about his new job transporting flesh-colored bags of red paint.
    • "The Island of Lost Dakotas" reveals that Cavendish regularly dies during missions and Dakota has to repeatedly travel back in time prevent these accidents from occurring. A montage of Cavendish's deaths is Played for Laughs, including him being skeletonized after falling into lava and his head blowing up after neglecting to put on a space helmet.
    • In "Fungus Among Us," the typically mild-mannered Milo uncharacteristically starts violently threatening an antagonist with an electric cattle prod.
      Cavendish: Milo! What in the devil was that?!
      Milo: Oh! Um, I thought we were doing Good Cop/Bad Cop.
  • Bloodless Carnage: "The Island of Lost Dakotas" shows Cavendish dying in several gruesome ways, but no gore is shown.
  • Boring, but Practical: A bit of an odd example. Whenever a Murphy man gets sick, the bad luck that constantly follows them lessens. While this is convenient for the non-cursed characters and anything they want to get done, it leads to the realization that an ordinary day without trouble is boring. Zack had to take a bus to school.
  • Born Lucky: Revealed in the crossover episode, half the reason Phineas and Ferb are able to do the things they do is that nothing they try ever goes wrong... or at least nothing did UNTIL they first come across Milo Murphy. When confronted with the way Milo's Extreme Hereditary Murphy’s Law condition affects the world around him, they are at a loss as to how to help.
  • Born Unlucky: Milo, having been born with Extreme Hereditary Murphy’s Law condition (EHML). Though in a twisted way, you could also say he's got a variant of Born Lucky, since he survives everything the world throws at him and he and any companions he has at any given time generally get out of any situation with minimal injury.
    • One episode shows Milo's mother flashing back to "the first time we met Milo." She and young Sara are standing in the kitchen when the wall spontaneously collapses.
    Brigette: Sara, is your father home yet?
    Sara: No.
    Brigette: Hm. Murphy's Law but no Martin. [steps out from behind the counter revealing her pregnancy] Looks like we're having a boy! [winces] Right now!
  • Bread, Eggs, Breaded Eggs: From "Murphy's Lard", Cavendish asks if the pistachio stand is safe from fires or barnyard animals, like pigs. Dakota then asks if it's safe from flaming pigs. Even better, a flaming pig does come by and try to destroy the stand. After being protected once, circumstances have the flaming pig succeed in destroying the stand.
    • Also, since Cavendish and Dakota are time travelers, they most likely KNEW about the flaming pig.
  • Brick Joke:
    • When Zack asks Milo if he's some kind of tough guy, Milo says no one's ever called him tough. Then after he's chased off by the sewer pipe, Melissa calls him tough as the reason she thinks he'll make it to school.
    • From the same episode, a super-strong bungee cord that holds construction equipment and a section of pipe find their way to Milo. Later on, at a construction site, the workers note the absence of these items.
    • At the bus stop, Milo tells Melissa he's got a new scar and texts her a photo of it so that she can see it from a safe distance. Later in the episode, a construction worker asks Milo about the new scar.
    • In "Sunny Side Up", Milo's opening story leads Zack to ask where the zoo is. When the egg pod is bouncing around, it ends up in a polar bear habitat, prompting a comment by Zack that that's where the zoo is. Same episode Milo puts an egg in his pocket and finds it still there and intact the next day which saves their demonstration.
    • In "Party of Peril," there's a Running Gag about ducks attacking people, particularly Elliot. In the next episode, "Smooth Opera-tor," during an Overly Long Gag of things going wrong onstage, Elliot runs out, being chased by a duck again.
    • One that crosses series, the rollercoaster from Phineas and Ferb crashed in Melissa's back yard, as we learn in "Murphy's Lard"
    • In "The Note", The General was overly fond of the disintegration ray, with one of the men finding a way to reverse it. In "Family Vacation", that same general shows up, grabbing the Murphy RV. His subordinate asks if it's time to use the disintegration ray, but The General retorts that "there's more buttons than just that one, you know."
  • But for Me, It Was Tuesday: Milo's gone through so much that he barely reacts to the improbable occurrences life sends his way. Doubles for most of his classmates and the town as a whole.
  • Butt-Monkey: With Murphy's Law as part of the title, you can expect a good bit of characters to be this trope.
    • Notably averted with Milo. In any other show, he would be this. But with his cheerful outlook and his Crazy-Prepared tendencies, Milo is having none of it.
    • Milo may not be this, but Elliot the crossing guard ("Safety Czar!") certainly seems to be exactly this trope every time he appears. Episodes which center on Elliott ("Disaster of My Dreams" and "World Without Milo") definitively confirm him as the show's alpha butt-monkey.
    • Dakota and Cavendish, who can never seem to accomplish any mission given to them and are regarded as incompetents because of it. Cavendish is this especially. Not only do his uptight, fuss-bucket ways make him a good victim for pratfalls, but he often dies due to his own careless actions, forcing his partner to go back in time to undo his deaths.
      • Since "Missing Milo" that seems no longer the case when they start being proactive. Brick and Savannah seem to have taken their place instead, not that Dakota and Cavendish are much better off.
    • Minor classmate character Joni often gets injured or in trouble in several scenes she's in, whether her arm gets hit at a football game after the cast just got off, or being the one person that walks off the pier at the school yacht. She's also the only minor character that was taken by the Pistachions on-screen in "Fungus Among Us".
    • To a degree, Bradley Nicholson is the butt of several of Milo's disasters. Bradley is especially so at the end of "The Phineas and Ferb Effect" where he is subject to a paradoxical leftover from the second Pistachion Takeover, as he had been turned into a Pistachion before the takeover had been averted. After which Bradley is left with a Pistachion right arm while the rest of him is made human again.

    C 
  • Call-Back: As expected for the successor to Phineas and Ferb, this trope is in full effect. In addition to numerous callbacks to Phineas and Ferb, as the episode count for Milo Murphy's Law increases, so do the callback opportunities within itself.
  • Calvinball: In "Game Night", Milo, Melissa, Zack, Sara and her friend Neal have a game night, playing "Lard World: The Officially Licensed Board Game", which takes on a whole new twist when Mr. Murphy's grill catches fire and scorches the game board. Later, when Cavendish and Vinnie Dakota arrive, Vinnie throws the table into the sky to stop a vortex, with Cavendish & Dakota participating in game night. Afterwards, when the game board is damaged, Milo makes a new game board out of pizza boxes and remnants of the other damaged board games, with a space where Milo lands and puts on a frog mask, a Twister-like treasure map, and a Rube Goldberg Device perpetual motion machine chance card bonus in the style of Mouse Trap.
  • Catapult Nightmare: In "Sunny Side Up", each of the main characters gets their own. Zack worries that their device would be destroyed the next morning, Melissa worries the egg will be cracked, and Milo wakes up with absolutely nothing wrong.
  • The Cavalry: In "The Phineas and Ferb Effect", the alternate Dakotas fly in to save Milo, Phineas and Ferb from getting M.U.L.C.H.ed. The Fireside Girls also show up to free them.
  • Character as Himself: In-Universe, Time Ape is credited as himself in "The Doctor Zone Files".
  • Character Tics: Balthazar is prone to pull a Fascinating Eyebrow. Milo himself typically holds onto the straps of his backpack
  • Chekhov's Gag: Episodes such as "Murphy's Lard" and "Backward to School Night" have jokes where Dakota acts casually at best and indifferent at worst about Cavendish getting injured or nearly getting killed. Later, in "The Island of Lost Dakotas", it's revealed why he's so blasé about these situations: Cavendish dies with such regularity that Dakota has created a system where he goes back in time to prevent his partner's constant deaths, then has the prior version of himself go off to live on a deserted island to minimize temporal irregularities.
  • Chekhov's Boomerang: In "The Phineas and Ferb Effect", we discover that Milo is surrounded by an excessive amount of negative probability ions, that Phineas and Ferb harness positive probability ions, and that, if Milo is surrounded by Phineas and Ferb, Murphy's Law can be aimed since positive and negative probability ions cannot occupy the same space. They of course use this knowledge to combat the Pistachions with a Murphy's Law Suit. Much later, in "Managing Murphy's Law", an Octalian spaceship discover Milo and his excessive amount of negative probability ions, which its Commander is very interested in, wanting to take Milo to their home planet (and therefor opening a new story arc).
  • Chekhov's Gun:
    • Diogee's ability to return home or follow Milo in any circumstance helps the gang get through many situations. Diogee doubles as Chekhov's Gunman.
    • The "llama incident" which gets mentioned all through season 1 and finally comes into play in "The Llama Incident" and "Missing Milo".
    • Woodpeckers turn up being nuisances to Milo and friends more than once, and then become the Guns in "The Llama Incident" and "Missing Milo" as well.
    • In several episodes, instead of the normal ending, it ends with an ominous The End?... Every single one of them features at least one Pistachion. Every one
    • Orton taking notes on everything he sees in "Fungus Among Us" later comes in handy when Cavendish's navigation device breaks and they need to find Professor Time's address. It also reminds Professor Time to come back and save everyone.
  • Chekhov's Gunman:
    • Dakota and Cavendish - their roles in early episodes is very small and doesn't influence what is happening with Milo at all. By the end of the first season, their mission as time travelers regularly affects Milo and the main plot.
    • Scott the Undergrounder plays a small role in "The Undergrounders" and keeps showing seemingly as a throwaway gag in several episodes afterwards. Come "Missing Milo", and he is essential in Zack and Melissa's side of the plot.
    • Professor Time is first mentioned by Dakota in "Missing Milo" as the creator of time travel. In "Fungus Among Us", after losing both time vehicles they have access to, Dakota and Cavendish remember Professor Time lived during this era and decide to enlist his help in building a new time machine early. Professor Time turns out to be Heinz Doofenshmirtz from Phineas and Ferb, beginning the crossover between the two shows.
  • Childhood Friends: Milo and Melissa met on the first day of first grade. Most of their classmates have known each other for at least that long.
  • Christmas Episode: "A Christmas Peril" has Sara, Milo and his friends going around town in order to try and get the whole Murphy family together for Christmas.
  • Cold Opening: The first episode uses one to establish Milo's character as an optimistic Walking Disaster Area.
  • Comically Missing the Point: From the first episode.
    Milo: We are right in the middle of Coyote Woods.
    Zack: Wait, Coyote Woods?! (Nervous Laughter) I've got a thing about coyotes. They're like big dogs that are dangerous to pet!
    Milo: Oh, don't worry. There's no coyotes here.
    Zack: There aren't?
    Milo: No. Actually, the woods were named after actor Peter Coyote.
    Zack: Really?
    Milo: Yeah. He donated all this land to the city as a wolf preserve.
    (Wolf Howl)
  • Commercial Break Cliffhanger: A Literal Cliffhanger occurs in the middle of "Milo Murphy's Halloween Scream-a-Torium".
  • Companion Cube: Milo's physics teacher has an unhealthy attachment to her desk.
  • Conditioned to Accept Horror: Every character in the show eventually becomes unperturbed at best and mildly annoyed at worst towards most situations, due to regularly dealing with Murphy's Law. Compare Zack in the first episode, who displayed shock and terror whenever something went wrong, to his Dull Surprise at seeing Milo, a pair of time-travelers, and a TV producer from the 1960s being hunted by pistachio creatures at the end of season one.
  • Consolation Backfire: From "Time Out":
    Dakota: Look on the bright side -
    Cavendish: My entire career has been one big, inconsequential joke. Where is the bright side?
    Dakota: The pistachio shipment is here and unharmed.
    • Moments later, Milo, his dad, and the Underwoods are trying to steer a fishing boat to safety:
    Dakota: Hey, at least it can't get any worse.
    • Subverted when the fishing boat barely hits the dock and damages a food shack, leaving the pistachio shipment unharmed for the moment; double subverted when one of the scuba tanks hits and ruins the shipping crate full of pistachios.
  • Continuity Nod: Similar to the above "Call Back" trope, there are far too many to count within the first season alone.
  • Contrived Coincidence: Many have happened because of Murphy's Law, such as:
    • In "The Doctor Zone Files", Dakota and Cavendish's pistachio stand made a hole into the theater, letting Milo, Sara, Melissa, and Zack be able to watch "The Dr. Zone Files" Movie.
    • In "The Note", Milo attempting to save Melissa by swinging caused a series of unfortunate events that saved Melissa.
    • In "Party of Peril", a truckload of cake, ice cream, and some dynamite caused an explosion of ice cream cake as a replacement to the one eaten by Diogee.
  • Cosplay: In the opening, we can see someone cosplaying as Dr. Zone, sans the hat.
    • Various Dr. Zone fans; including Milo and Sara, wore this in "The Doctor Zone Files", while some of them even kept wearing them such as in "Wilder West".
  • Cousin Oliver: Adding Doof to the cast was seen to some as a ratings gimmick to keep Phineas fans interested.
  • Cover Innocent Eyes and Ears: In "Rooting For the Enemy", a father is seen covering his son's eyes from watching Milo's cheering.
  • Crazy-Prepared:
    • Because Milo is aware of his terrible luck, he keeps his backpack stocked with supplies to help him out of any bind. The walls of his bedroom are covered with warning signs, and he even has a full-body hazmat suit hanging up by the door.
    • In "Sunny Side Up", Melissa brings a wagon full of egg cartons of 12 stacked 26 high, 4 long and 2 deep. By the end of the testing phase, they were down to just one egg...which itself gets broken the following day. Milo had a spare though.
    • Milo's older sister is often prepared for any mishaps to a degree that even Milo finds to be unneeded.
    • It turns out that Milo's babysitter, Veronica, was the one who gave him his Bag of Holding, and was so Crazy-Prepared that she could handle any catastrophe that Murphy's Law threw at her while she sat for Milo.
  • Creative Closing Credits: The closing credits are presented over a series of clips from the episode.
  • Creator Career Self-Deprecation: In the episode where Milo and the crew are looking at potential careers, Milo remarks that 'animator' doesn't sound like a real job and thinks it's a typo.
    • In a later episode Milo engages in some acting and comments on watching footage of him that he's not a very good actor.
  • Crossover: The first episode of the second season, "The Phineas and Ferb Effect" was a crossover with, you guessed it, Phineas and Ferb.
  • Crossover Couple: In "The Phineas and Ferb Effect," Baljeet has a crush on Melissa, though he's respectful of the relationship he and Buford believe she has with Zack.
  • Curse: All men of the Murphy family, and anyone in their immediate vicinity, are cursed to experience the worst possible luck in everything they do. An unusual case for this trope, in that the show doesn't center around trying to fix the curse, just making the best out of whatever mess it causes.
  • Curse Escape Clause: Melissa has been looking for one, but not with any success yet. She admits that she eventually realized Milo wouldn't want to be cured and that her interest is more in figuring out how Murphy's Law works.
  • Cutaway Gag: Slightly more frequent than in Phineas and Ferb.
    • Several of these revolve around hypothetical TV show premises.
      Doofenshmirtz: We [himself, Cavendish, Dakota, Orton and Perry] can all live together like a '70s sitcom! In the '50s!
      (Cut to title card:)
      Announcer: Four Men and a Platypus is filmed in front of a live studio audience.
    • In "Fungus Among Us," Dakota announces "We're going back to the 60s!", cuing a cut to him dancing in a speedo and body paint. When the visual cuts back, everyone else expresses confusion.
      Cavendish: What was that?
      Dakota: Never mind, let's just get in the car.
    • In "Now I Am a Murphy," Doofenshmirtz explains that a statue he accidentally brought to life isn't technically alive but "animated...and expertly storyboarded." Cut to a photo of the episode's storyboard artist and a jingle: Jaaaaaaaaames Kim!
      Doofenshmirtz: He just became a daddy!

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